Ex-Marine’s ‘Best Buy-cott’ gathers steam over radical Muslim ties

Rusty Weiss

Rusty Weiss is a freelance journalist focusing on the conservative movement and its political agenda. He has been writing conservatively charged articles for several years in the upstate New York area, and has appeared in the Troy Record with a well received article covering the War on Terrorism. He has also written for the American Thinker, NewsBusters and FoxNews.com, and edits three major technology newsletters.

In April the Minnesota branch of the Council on American-Islamic Relations announced that retail giant Best Buy had become a “Platinum Sponsor” for its fifth anniversary banquet. And former U.S. Marine James Canning decided to do something about it.

In a YouTube video, the Iraq and Beirut veteran demonstrated his frustration with “one of his favorite stores” by cutting his Best Buy “Reward Zone” card in half.

“Because of this support Best Buy has been giving the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR, I can no longer conduct business with Best Buy.”

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In an interview with the Daily Caller, Canning explained how his protest video came about.

“I read a news article on it on my Facebook page,” Canning said. “So I made my video. It was kind of a spur-of-the-moment thing.”

“When you’ve got a company that supports an organization that supports terrorism,” Canning said of his boycott, “it’s kind of, in my opinion, asinine to do my business there.”

In an email, Best Buy spokesman Damon Gammon confirmed the company’s contribution to CAIR.

“Over the past two years,” Gammon said, “our Inter-Faith Employee Business Network, a group of employees focused on promoting diversity and inclusion at Best Buy, has supported CAIR-Minnesota with $1,450 in total contributions to support an annual banquet.”

Ryan Mauro, a national security analyst at the Clarion Fund, a group that “produces and distributes documentaries on the threats of Radical Islam,” told TheDC that the relationship between the electronics giant and the Muslim advocacy group is a dangerous one.

“It legitimizes an organization that shouldn’t be legitimized. It funds a group that shouldn’t be funded,” Mauro said.

“It helps CAIR parade as a moderate force and it helps the group claim to be the representative of the Muslim community. Best Buy has done a disservice to anti-Islamist Muslims who are tired of having groups like CAIR talk on their behalf.”

According to the Middle East Forum, Best Buy’s public relations department has declined to rule out future support for CAIR — despite reminders of CAIR’s relationship with terror groups like Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood.

CAIR is one of only three prominent Islamic organizations to be named unindicted co-conspirators in a case alleging criminal conspiracy to support Hamas.

In 2009, the FBI severed its own institutional ties with CAIR when evidence pointed to the group being a front for radical organizations operating within the United States. In one case, CAIR executive director Nihad Awad was shown to have participated in planning meetings with officials who had been convicted of funneling $12.4 million to Hamas through the now-defunct Holy Land Foundation.

Canning says the link is unambiguous. “CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood are connected, and they’re both funding and supporting Muslim extremists.”